The official blog for singer, writer, director and human rights advocate Aisha and her affiliated web sites.

Friday, July 15, 2016

Attorney General Loretta Lynch Dodged 74 Questions In Congress About The Corruption That Led To Hillary Clinton Not Being Criminally Charged For Mishandling Classified Information

U.S. Representative John Ratcliffe rips Loretta Lynch
in congressional hearing

After the very public and unceremonious destruction of the
U.S. government's name last week, during a press conference
by FBI Director, James Comey, who announced to America and
the world, the law enforcement agency would not be charging
presidential candidate, Hillary Clinton, with the
mishandling of classified documents, Congress convened a
hearing featuring his boss, attorney general, Loretta Lynch.

Lynch heads up the U.S. Department of Justice, which is the
parent agency of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).
The hearing was due to public outcry slamming the FBI, DOJ
and U.S. government on the whole as "corrupt" and "rigged"
in messages that flooded social networking websites such as
Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.

During the hearing, Lynch nervously dodged 74 pertinent
questions about the corruption that led to Clinton not being
charged with crimes other Americans faced for mishandling
classified information. IN short, her name is gone. Lynch is
a very intelligent woman. She is also the first black female
Attorney General of the United States. She should not have
allowed Clinton and Obama to use her in this disgraceful
manner.

Loretta Lynch in Congress looking nervous and
uncomfortable

Lynch was grilled by Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob
Goodlatte, who accused her of engaging in corruption for her
previous boss, former president, Bill Clinton and her
current boss, president Barack Obama. U.S. Representative
Judge Gomert blasted Lynch during the hearing. U.S.
Representative John Ratcliffe also slammed Lynch during the
hearing, regarding her dropping the case against Clinton
because the presidential candidate stated she would hire her
as U.S. Attorney General, if elected.